24 September 2019

Boris Johnson’s Strategy of Assured Mutual Destruction: Crazy but not Irrational

One of the frequent equivocal “courtesy” titles that has been awarded to Boris Johnson these days is that of plunger or reckless gambler. Boris Johnson may be many things — his language coarse, his behavior ruthless — but if you analyze his behavior in the current Brexit affair from a decision theoretic angle there is a rational interpretation for his seemingly irrational approach. Continue reading >>

Why the UK’s Government’s Demands on the Irish Backstop Would Violate the Sovereignty of the EU-27

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has asked the European Council President in a letter for reciprocal ‘binding legal guarantees’ not to put in place infrastructure, checks, or controls at the border between Northern Ireland and Ireland. The significance of this has been amplified by the European Parliament’s resolution that it will not consent to any Withdrawal Agreement without an Irish Backstop, in direct contravention to the UK’s position. This post will argue that the EU legal order places constraints on this option. Ireland would be in breach of EU law if it followed this course, and the EU institutions have no discretion to suspend these legal obligations. Continue reading >>
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What Difference Does it Make to Fully Annex the Quasi-Annexed Occupied Territories?

Whether or not Netanyahu’s era of prime minister of Israel is coming to an end, his campaign announcement that Israel will unilaterally annex at least parts of the Occupied Palestinian Territories should not be dismissed. First, because this possibility has long ceased to be a political taboo in Israel. Second, and more importantly, because in many ways, a sub-official process of partial annexation is already taking place in Israel, to a large extent, under the radar of the international community. Continue reading >>
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23 September 2019

Luxemburg as the Last Resort

A criminal proceeding has been suspended by a Hungarian justice of the Pest Central District Court to ask the European Court of Justice preliminary questions, inter alia, about his own judicial independence. Now, Hungary’s Supreme Court has stepped in and ruled that the reference was illegal, essentially arguing that preliminary references are not the fora to discuss such claims. In fact, however, this preliminary reference reveals that all other means to effectively challenge the rule of law backsliding in Hungary have failed. Continue reading >>
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22 September 2019

Italia Viva, Party System Reform Morta

Until a decade ago or even less, Italian politics appeared a matter of its own political idiosyncrasies and was dismissed as a peculiar case which is cause more for an amused smile but serious political analysis. This is not the case anymore. The sad truth is that parliamentary regimes based on a functioning majority in Parliament do not seem to be able to deliver sufficiently stable and effective governments these days. Continue reading >>
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21 September 2019

Justiciable but not Necessarily Illegal

The UK Supreme Court is about to decide the fate of the UK Government’s decision to prorogue Parliament. Two are the main issues: First, justiciability – whether the Government’s decision can be subject to judicial scrutiny or whether it lies beyond the Judiciary’s remit. Second, if judicial review is available, whether the Government’s decision is lawful. Although the two issues prima facie appear to be distinct, in this case they are intertwined. I believe that the issue of prorogation in this case is justiciable and that the Government’s decision to prorogue falls within the legal boundaries of the Constitution. Continue reading >>

Difficult Times Ahead for the Facebook „Supreme Court“

Over the past years, Facebook as well as other online platforms faced constant criticism and pressure from civil society, lawmakers, and governments regarding their role in content moderation. As a response, Facebook for the last two years sought a way to handle the decision-making process in a more transparent, accountable, and fair way, while at the same time diverting responsibility from itself and its CEO and sole controller, Mark Zuckerberg. Now, it finally rolls out its plan for an independent Oversight Board, also referred by some, including Mark Zuckerberg, as a “Supreme Court”. Major questions arise as to its mandate, the establishment of global free speech standards and the reactions of national courts. Continue reading >>
20 September 2019

Staatenlos in Assam

In ihrer Heimat gelten sie ab sofort als illegale Einwanderer. Das Land, in das sie ausgewiesen werden sollen, versinkt langsam unter dem steigenden Meeresspiegel. Fast zwei Millionen Menschen, die im indischen Bundesstaat Assam leben, gelten aufgrund der Veröffentlichung eines Nationalen Bürgerregisters durch die indische Zentralregierung seit dem 31. August 2019 als illegale Einwanderer aus Bangladesch. Tatsächlich gelten die Betroffenen bereits jetzt als Staatenlose. Den Menschen droht eine Situation rechtlicher und territorialer Bodenlosigkeit – verloren zwischen nationalem Staatsangehörigkeitsrecht und internationaler Verantwortungslosigkeit. Continue reading >>
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Foreign Ideas about ‘Child Marriage’?

On 4 September 2019, a Frankfurt court ruled that Germany must recognize marriages involving minors that had been concluded within the EU. The case involved a couple who had married in Bulgaria and now resides in Germany. The bride was 17 when she wed. The case throws into sharp relief hidden assumptions within the broader debate about ‘child marriage’ that has occupied German politicians and commentators over the last two years. These assumptions matter because they reflect broader European and international popular and political discussions as well as laws. But they also matter because they ignore a number of important developments over the last century across much of the world in reforming family law. Continue reading >>

Offener Brief an den Deutschen Bundestag

100 deutsche Staatsrechtslehrerinnen und Staatsrechtslehrer fordern, unverzüglich das Bundeswahlgesetz anzupassen und den Bundestag auf seine Normalgröße von 598 Abgeordneten zurückzuführen. Continue reading >>
17 September 2019
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Protecting the Independence of National Councils of the Judiciary on the EU Level

Councils for the judiciary are one of the main targets in political efforts to diminish the independence of the judiciary in several countries. Since more and more countries in the EU fail to provide a minimum of security as to their independence, it is of the utmost importance that this is dealt with on Union level. Continue reading >>
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Der virtuelle Mr. Hyde

Heute vor einem Jahr brannte es in Zelle 143 der JVA Kleve. Darin eingeschlossen war der junge Syrer Amad A., der wenige Tage später seinen Verbrennungen und Vergiftungen erlag. Amad A. war am 6. Juli 2018 von der Polizei in Geldern festgenommen und darauf inhaftiert worden. Die Inhaftierung erfolgte aufgrund eines Haftbefehls, mit dem der Malier Amedy G. gesucht wurde. Amad A. befand sich fälschlicherweise in Haft und kam auf grässliche Weise ums Leben. Der Fall verdeutlicht die Risiken im Umgang mit polizeilichen Datenbanken. Continue reading >>
16 September 2019

Where Power Lies or Where Power Lied?

Tomorrow, on Tuesday 17 September, the UK Supreme Court will be asked to consider appeals from the Court of Session in Scotland, and the High Court in England on the question of whether prime minister Boris Johnson’s advice to the Queen to prorogue parliament was lawful. Such a question will oblige the court to consider foundational questions of the separation of powers and the division between law and politics. It will also have to decide whether the motives of executive decision-making can be judged against principles of parliamentary sovereignty, democracy and the rule of law. If the Supreme Court finds the advice was unlawful, an even more difficult question arises in what sort of order may be given to remedy such a legal wrong: can the court order Parliament to return to a session which has ended, or the Queen to ‘un-prorogue’? Continue reading >>
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14 September 2019

The UK Constitution and Brexit – Five Brief External Observations

As a constitutional lawyer one therefore cannot help but ask: What is happening to the British Constitution? What is going on with the political and parliamentary culture of a nation so proud of its parliamentary history? And what about the Queen? In the following, I would therefore like to share five very brief and somewhat unsystematic observations of these recent developments from a German perspective. Continue reading >>
13 September 2019

Zivile Seenotrettung vor deutschen Gerichten

Während die deutsche Politik und Öffentlichkeit mit dem Finger auf Italien und auch Malta und ihre Politik der geschlossenen Häfen zeigen, beschäftigte sich im Schatten der medialen Aufmerksamkeit auch die deutsche Verwaltungsgerichtsbarkeit mit einem Fall ziviler Seenotrettung und Menschenrechtsbeobachtung. Er zeigt, dass die deutsche Rolle im Umgang mit ziviler Seenotrettung nicht ganz so vorbildlich ist, wie sie nach außen hin gespielt wird. Continue reading >>
12 September 2019

Acquiescing in Refoulement

The judgment of the US Supreme Court issued on Wednesday (Attorney General v. East Bay Sanctuary Covenant) purports to be simply procedural: It overturns a lower court injunction that prevented President Trump’s unilateral “safe third country” rule from coming into force before its legality is tested on the merits. But in truth, the Supreme Court knowingly acquiesced in the refoulement of refugees arriving at the US southern border. Continue reading >>

Demokratische Miet-Bestimmung

Selten bekommt ein Gesetzesentwurf des Berliner Senats wohl so viel Aufmerksamkeit, wie in den letzten Wochen der sog. „Mietendeckel“. Die Reaktionen auf den Referentenentwurf ließen nicht lange auf sich warten: Ungerecht, Enteignung, Planwirtschaft. Opposition und Verbände kündigen Verfassungsklagen an. Auch Ex-BVerfG-Präsident Papier attestiert dem Vorstoß in einem Gutachten im Auftrag des Bundesverbandes deutscher Wohnungsunternehmen (GdW) die Verfassungswidrigkeit. Tatsächlich handelt es sich letztlich jedoch nicht um eine Frage der Verfassung, sondern demokratischer Auseinandersetzung. Continue reading >>
11 September 2019

Norway’s Heureka Moment?

Norwegian elections are usually quite boring. While the government changes between different parties, the party structure has been remarkably stable for more than 80 years. And for decades, constitutional lawyers have been denied juicy electoral scandals. The electoral system runs smoothly without major hiccups. Monday’s local election brought at last a glimmer of excitement for Norwegian constitutional lawyers. Not only did a newly-formed protest movement shake up the traditional party landscape. It also came to light that Norway's public broadcaster attempted to manipulate students in the non-official school election. Continue reading >>
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Recognizing Court-Packing

There is near scholarly consensus that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has successfully packed the Turkish Constitutional Court (TCC). Court packing is commonly understood as expanding the membership of the court, appointing judges with long tenures that extend beyond a couple of election cycles, and who are ideologically committed to the executive’s constitutional vision. These elements, however, are still foreign to Turkey’s political elites. Continue reading >>
09 September 2019

Ein Volkskanzler

Jetzt mal angenommen, es käme einer. Mal angenommen, da wäre plötzlich einer, der die Menschen begeistert und mit Hoffnung erfüllt. Ein Neuer, ein Erneuerer, ein von der alten Bundesrepublik und ihrer Politik und ihrem zerfallenden Parteiensystem gänzlich Unkontaminierter. Ein Zukunftsszenario. Continue reading >>
07 September 2019
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The Age of Constitutional Barbarism

We need to rediscover the force of normative arguments in order to better understand the autocratic rivals to liberal democracy. Geburtstagskind Verfassungsblog provides a vibrant and openly accessible forum for discussions. Continue reading >>
06 September 2019

Fighting Fire with Fire

At the first sight, the likely nomination of Věra Jourova as Commissioner for rule of law and dropping Frans Timmermans out of the portfolio appears to be a significant victory for the Visegrad Group. However, considering Jourova’s track record, her nomination might be a clever, but hazardous move by Ursula von der Leyen that may deepen the cleavage among the Visegrad countries, put an end to their coordinated acting in sovereignty related issues, and cause more headache in Budapest and Warsaw than expected. Continue reading >>
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05 September 2019
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The Commission’s Rule of Law Blueprint for Action: A Missed Opportunity to Fully Confront Legal Hooliganism

In its first Communication entitled “Further strengthening the Rule of Law within the Union” published on 3 April 2019, the Commission offered a useful overview of the state of play while also positively inviting all stakeholders to make concrete proposals so as to enhance the EU’s “rule of law toolbox”. A follow up Communication from July 2019 sets out multiple “concrete actions for the short and medium term”. This post will highlight the most innovative actions proposed by the Commission before highlighting what we view as the main weakness of its blueprint: a reluctance to fully accept the reality of rule of law backsliding. Continue reading >>

Verfassungsunmittelbare Diskriminierungsverbote im Privatrecht? – Vorerst nicht!

Im Verfassungsrecht gibt es Fälle, die ihre Bedeutung gerade dadurch erhalten, dass nicht über sie entschieden wurde. Einen solchen Beschluss hat vor kurzem die 3. Kammer des Ersten Senats vorgelegt: Sie nahm die Verfassungsbeschwerde einer Arbeitnehmerin nicht zur Entscheidung an, die wegen Überschreitens der Altershöchstgrenze nicht in die betriebliche Altersversorgung aufgenommen wurde. Continue reading >>
04 September 2019

Auf dem Weg zum selektiven Grundrechtsschutz

Wie bestellt, so geliefert: Im Auftrag des Vereins Terre des Femmes hat Prof. Dr. Martin Nettesheim geprüft, wie ein Kopftuchverbot für Kinder (bis zur Vollendung des 14. Lebensjahres) mit dem Grundgesetz vereinbar ist. Das Ergebnis: Das Kopftuchverbot für Grund- und Mittelstufler kann auch in Deutschland kommen. Der Versuch Nettesheims, ein Kopftuchverbot für Schülerinnen zu rechtfertigen, überzeugt aus verfassungsrechtlicher Perspektive nicht. Continue reading >>

Schroedinger’s Backstop

Weiler, Sarmiento and Faull suggest that the best way to avoid a no-deal Brexit, even at the 11th hour, would be to adopt “a regime of dual autonomy”. EU officials said that this proposal was "inadequate and nowhere near the landing zone". But we can also entertain the thought that reciprocity or symmetry is indeed a necessary if not a sufficient condition for the backstop compass to lead us to a landing zone. Six ingredients need to be added to the mix, however. Continue reading >>

Duftmarken einer Politik der sozialen Kohäsion

Am 10. Juli 2019 hat das Bundeskabinett zwölf „Maßnahmen der Bundesregierung zur Umsetzung der Ergebnisse der Kommission „‚Gleichwertige Lebensverhältnisse‘“ verabschiedet. Wer das Wort „Maßnahmen“ liest, wird annehmen, es seien spezifische, problemlösende Instrumente vorgestellt worden, mit denen gleichwertige Lebensverhältnisse hergestellt werden. Dem ist indes nicht so. Absichtserklärungen dominieren, wobei die Modalitäten der Zielverwirklichung weithin vage bleiben und Alltagstaugliches für die nahe Zukunft fehlt. Continue reading >>
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03 September 2019

Nostalgische Justizstaatsskepsis

Jonathan Sumption ist einer der schillerndsten Intellektuellen des Vereinigten Königreichs. In seinem neuen Buch kritisiert er, wie das „Imperium des Rechts“ immer größere Landgewinne verzeichnet und in immer mehr Bereiche des täglichen Lebens vordringt. „Trials of the State“ ist wie ein Volkshochschulkurs im Granteln über den Traditionsverfall im Recht einer modernen Gesellschaft mit ihrem inhärenten Drang zur Verrechtlichung. Continue reading >>
02 September 2019

König Midas, Hauptmann Kettensäge und die Mittel des Völkerrechts zum Schutz der Biodiversität

Spätestens seit der Veröffentlichung des UN Global Assessment Report im Mai 2019 wissen wir, dass etwa eine Million der insgesamt acht Millionen Arten vom Aussterben bedroht sind – mehr als jemals zuvor in der Geschichte unseres Planeten. Das sechste globale Massensterben von Tieren und Pflanzen erfordert ein konzertiertes Vorgehen der internationalen Staatengemeinschaft. Doch nationale Alleingänge, wie des US-Präsidenten Trump und seines brasilianischen Amtskollegen Bolsonaro, nehmen zugunsten der heimischen Wirtschaft unwiederbringliche Verluste der Artenvielfalt in Kauf, die den Bestand der Ökosysteme weltweit gefährden. Welche Mittel hält das Völkerrecht bereit, um dem entgegenzuwirken? Continue reading >>
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The Next Few Days Will Reveal where the Heart of Power Lies in the British Constitution

Were the UK government to ignore a Supreme Court judgment finding the advice to prorogue illegal, or even refuse to recognise an Act of Parliament directing action to prevent a no-deal Brexit, this would be a constitutional crisis. This will bring all institutions into conflict – most immediately the crown, which may be obligated (one way or another) to make an extremely polarising political choice. Continue reading >>
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Die offene Gemeinschaft des Verfassungsblogs

Zehn Geburtstags-Thesen zu zehn Jahren Verfassungsblog aus Sicht des Europäischen Verfassungsrechts. Continue reading >>
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01 September 2019

”A Supervisory Agency of Its Own Making”?

In December 2019, the recently constituted European Parliament will elect the European Ombudsman. The current European Ombudsman, Emily O’Reilly, already announced that she will seek a new mandate when her term expires. Her performance during the last five years, however, raises serious questions about her understanding of the mandate. Continue reading >>
31 August 2019

Boris and the Queen: Lessons from Canada

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s advice to the Queen that she prorogue Parliament for several weeks has sparked vociferous controversy. The unfortunate situation, which threatens to do real damage to constitutional, political and social relationships, has some analogues in former British dominions such as Canada. Continue reading >>
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30 August 2019

Backstop Alternatives: Examining the “We Cannot Trust the Brits” Excuse

Last week, together with two colleagues, Daniel Sarmiento and Sir Jonathan Faull, we published a plan which could avoid a no-deal Brexit. It is to one reaction, attributed in the Press to anonymous Commission sources that I wish to react. And I do not do this solely or even mainly in order to defend the viability of our particular Proposal. I do so because I fear that this same reaction of these anonymous EU officials will meet any proposal for "alternative arrangements" to be put on the table by the UK government. Continue reading >>
29 August 2019

Prorogued until October?

The British government yesterday secured a prorogation of Parliament from the Queen. Parliament will stand prorogued no earlier than Monday 9th September and no later than Thursday 12th September 2019 to Monday 14th October 2019. For many commentators the weeks from now until 12 September and from 14 October to 31 October (the day the United Kingdom exits the European Union) were crucial. It tipped the balance of the prorogation from blindingly unconstitutional to constitutionally dubious, but permissible. Regardless of whether one finds this line of reasoning convincing, there is a threat that this prorogation can be extended indefinitely that has been largely overlooked: the Prorogation Act 1867. Continue reading >>
27 August 2019

Pseudo-Legal Justice

On the morning of his thirtieth birthday, Josef K., a member of the Council of the Anti-corruption Agency of Montenegro, was dismissed of his duties, by the very same body that appointed him: the Parliament of Montenegro. This could be the first sentence of a novel written by Franz Kafka if he was with us today. While Kafka’s Josef K. was arrested and left to roam free through a court building to find a courtroom in which his destiny would be determined, Josef K. in this story is in a similarly peculiar situation: He does not know which court in Montenegro he should appeal to and present his grievances. This Kafkaesque reality is the result of a questionable interpretation of the law by Montenegro’s Supreme Court – just another piece in the demise of the country’s rule of law. Continue reading >>
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26 August 2019
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An Offer the EU and UK Cannot Refuse II: FAQ

We have received many comments and questions to our Proposal on avoiding a No-Deal Brexit. The following are the most frequently asked questions with our replies. Continue reading >>
23 August 2019

Öffentliches Recht als öffentliches Gut

Der Verfassungsblog als Glücksfall, Wagnis und Aufgabe: ein Geburtstags-Post von einer, die (fast) von Anfang an mit dabei war. Continue reading >>
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22 August 2019
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An Offer the EU and UK Cannot Refuse

The EU reasonably expects a guarantee that Brexit will not compromise the integrity of its customs and regulatory territory. Hence its insistence on the Backstop. The UK reasonably expects a guarantee that it will not be locked into a permanent Customs (and regulatory) Union with the EU. Hence its rejection of the Backstop. The resulting deadlock is hurling both parties into a No-Deal Brexit. This proposal, which includes features which have never been discussed, will guarantee the integrity and autonomy of the EU’s and UK’s respective customs and regulatory territories, and will require neither a Customs Union between the two nor a hard border between Northern Ireland and the Republic. Continue reading >>
21 August 2019

Freie Fahrt für die Mietpreisbremse

Das Bundesverfassungsgericht hat gestern die Berliner Mietpreisbremse für mit dem Grundgesetz vereinbar erklärt. Der Beschluss ist bemerkenswert, weil er auf dem Höhepunkt der politischen Diskussionen die Sozialbindung des Eigentums betont und der Politik erhebliche Spielräume für ihr Vorgehen zur Regulierung des Wohnungsmarkts und zur Steuerung der Sozialstruktur in den Ballungsräumen belässt. Continue reading >>

In Rights We Trust

Cases concerning the execution of the European Arrest Warrant (EAW) provide seemingly endless material for new questions of fundamental importance to the relationship of the multiple constitutional layers in Europe. In a barely noted judgment in the case of Romeo Castaño v. Belgium, the European Court of Human Rights has now added an important piece to this puzzle. The judgment indicates that, in the light of other recent jurisprudence of both the Court of Justice of the EU and the ECtHR, both Courts are on their way to find a workable framework to address some of the issues in this field. Continue reading >>
20 August 2019

Article 370: Is it a Basic Feature of the Indian Constitution?

The move of India’s Government to nullify Article 370 of the Constitution not only broadened the legislative powers of the Union Parliament over the Jammu & Kashmir but also demoted J&K to the position of a Union Territory. Apart from doubts about the Government's power to bring about these changes and their legitimacy, it is an open question whether Article 370 is a basic feature of the Constitution of India. Given the sacrosanct political arrangement it encapsulates as well as its role as an exemplar of Indian federal asymmetry, it is now upon the Supreme Court to formally acknowledge the constitutional basis of India’s delicate distribution of powers. Continue reading >>
18 August 2019
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What happens after the Polish Elections?

What would become of what's left of Polish constitutional democracy in the case of another PiS victory in October? And what if they lose the elections? How could the damage done by them be undone? Continue reading >>
17 August 2019

The Constitutional Siege on Article 370

On August 5, India revoked Article 370, a controversial provision in the Indian Constitution, which happened to be the only link between the State of Jammu & Kashmir and the Indian Union. After its revocation, the Union parliament passed a bill to reorganise the State into two federally administered Union Territories, a move which some have labelled as “illegal occupation” of the State. Continue reading >>
15 August 2019

Resentment, Populism and Political Strategies in Italy

After Matteo Salvini announced his plan of holding snap elections, the former Italian prime minister (Presidente del Consiglio), Matteo Renzi launched the idea to postpone elections by forming a transistional government supported by the Partito democratico and the MoVimento 5 stelle, amongst others. Renzi knows that, according to the polls, Salvini’s political party (the Lega) could win the elections and form a government with Fratelli d’Italia, a post-fascist and still far-right party or with Forza Italia, the party created by Silvio Berlusconi. But would this move prevent a populist government? Continue reading >>

Schengener Endspiele

Trotz eines eindeutigen Beschlusses des Verwaltungsgerichts München setzt das BMI weiter auf direkte Zurückschiebungen nach Griechenland und Spanien unter den mit diesen Staaten im August 2018 geschlossenen Verwaltungsabkommen. Das VG München hat am 8. August 2019 im Verfahren des einstweiligen Rechtsschutzes angeordnet, einen afghanischen Antragsteller aus Griechenland auf Staatskosten zurückzuholen und ihm vorläufig die Einreise zu gestatten. Der Fall ist jedoch für die generelle Zurückschiebungs- und Zurückweisungspraxis sowie für das Gemeinsame europäische Asylsystem und den Schengen-Raum als Ganzes von erheblicher Bedeutung. Continue reading >>

Putin and the Costs of Being Wrong

Since mid-2019, Moscow experiences a wave of public protests, triggered by the decision of the government not to allow several opposition candidates to run for the city parliament in the elections scheduled for September. How can we explain this unprecedented rise of spontaneous protests activity? For me, the protests in Moscow are an example of a core problem any authoritarian regime faces but which is frequently overlooked by the analysts and scientists: the risks of mistakes. Continue reading >>
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14 August 2019

Wie hoch müssen die Hammel springen?

Ende Juni bezweifelte die AfD-Fraktion bei einer nächtlichen Sitzung zum „Zweiten Datenschutz-Anpassungs- und -Umsetzungsgesetz EU“ die Beschlussfähigkeit des Bundestags. Offenkundig waren weniger als die Hälfte seiner Mitglieder anwesend. Nichtsdestotrotz wies der Sitzungsvorstand das Ansinnen der AfD-Fraktion zurück, indem er die Beschlussfähigkeit einmütig bejahte. Schon unmittelbar nach dem verweigerten Hammelsprung sprach die AfD von einem „Rechtsbruch“. Heute nun hat die Fraktion angekündigt, das Verhalten des Sitzungsvorstands tatsächlich in Karlsruhe prüfen zu lassen. Die Erfolgsaussichten sind gering. Continue reading >>

Braucht ein „kranker“ Wahlrechtsschutz neue Therapien?

An diesem Freitag wird die Hauptsacheentscheidung des Sächsischen Verfassungsgerichtshofs in Sachen Landesliste der AfD Sachsen erwartet. Im einstweiligen Rechtsschutz hatte der Gerichtshof der Partei teilweise Recht gegeben. Diese Entscheidung hat nicht nur eine bemerkenswerte Vorgeschichte, sie markiert zugleich einen fundamentalen Bruch mit der bisherigen Rechtsprechung in Wahlsachen. Das kann man im Grundsatz mit Blick auf die Rechtsschutzeffektivität begrüßen, die Langzeitwirkungen, die damit einhergehen, sind aber kaum vorhersehbar. Continue reading >>
12 August 2019

Klimanotstände

Am 28. Juni hat der Bundestag über einen Antrag der Fraktion der Linken mit dem Titel „Klimanotstand anerkennen – Klimaschutz-Sofortmaßnahmen verabschieden, Strukturwandel sozial gerecht umsetzen“ beraten. Das Vorhaben irritiert aus verschiedenen Gründen. Erstens aufgrund der gewählten Notstandsrhetorik, die nach Ansicht vieler doch vorderhand dem Arsenal der traditionell exekutivfreundlichen politischen Rechten zuzuordnen ist. Zweitens wegen des Widerspruchs von Sofortmaßnahmen, die keinen Aufschub dulden, und der Maßgabe der sozial gerechten Umsetzung eines „Strukturwandels“. Continue reading >>
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